We know less about this nominee than we knew about any previous nominee and her questionnaire shines no light on what would be the most illuminating experience _ her service in the White House. |
We live in a new world. It is a post-September 11 world. We have to adjust to those realities. I believe we can do both: have security and liberty, the great concern of our Founding Fathers. |
We need that bill passed, ... New York City is doing a great job on homeland security, but their resources are stretched as far as they can be stretched, and we're not getting the help from Washington that we need. |
We need to be careful here. This is a nominee who could shift the balance of the court and thus the laws of the nation for decades to come. |
We need to examine what went wrong. If it was one mistake, fine, but it's mistake after mistake after mistake, |
we ought to force it to happen. |
We stand on the precipice of a constitutional crisis, ... Bill Pryor is the last of the four most controversial nominees. |
We take terrorism seriously and we take its victims seriously as well, ... I hope this does set a precedent. |
We thought it was the right time to figure out where the Chinese are headed on this issue and other issues, like intellectual property and port security. |
We're asking that this be done, and I don't think we have much choice. The economy seems to be going along nicely now. But if you ask any economist what's the No. 1 thing that could stop it, it's oil prices. |
We're hanging in the balance here. |
We're making laws here, not sausages, |
What does that say about someone's racial sensitivity, especially in the 5th Circuit of Mississippi? Can't we do better? |
What is going on, in my opinion, the root of the problem is far deeper than local gas stations. It goes to huge oil companies who are in cahoots with OPEC. |
What kind of justice will John Roberts be? |